Women and Democracy Initiative (WDI)
http://hdl.handle.net/10566/1378
2024-03-29T15:51:22ZAt the crossroads: linking strategic frameworks to address gender-based violence and HIV/ AIDS in Southern Africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10566/536
At the crossroads: linking strategic frameworks to address gender-based violence and HIV/ AIDS in Southern Africa
Combrinck, Helene; Wakefield, Lorenzo
In recent years, southern African governments
have made a number of important commitments on
international and regional levels to combat HIV/
AIDS. The subregion has also seen a number of
strategic developments such as the drafting and
implementation of the SADC HIV/AIDS Policy
Framework for 2003-2007 and the appointment by
the UN Secretary-General of a Task Force on
Women, Girls and HIV/AIDS in Southern Africa.It is now generally accepted that the
intersections between gender-based violence and
HIV/AIDS are among the most significant of the
gendered dimensions of this pandemic. It is
noteworthy that the UN Special Rapporteur on
Violence Against Women devoted her 2005
thematic report to these intersections. She
observed that while some progress is being made
separately on ending violence against women and
on stemming the spread of HIV/AIDS, national and
international efforts would be vastly more effective
if they addressed the interconnectness between the
two pandemics.
2007-01-01T00:00:00ZTraining for police on the Domestic Violence Act
http://hdl.handle.net/10566/209
Training for police on the Domestic Violence Act
Combrinck, Helene; Wakefield, Lorenzo
The inadequate or inappropriate police responses to domestic violence often result from a lack of knowledge of the Domestic Violence Act (DVA) and the National Instruction or from a misinterpretation of the DVA’s provisions. In the interviews undertaken, the central question asked was: ‘Do current training programmes provide SAPS members with the knowledge and skills required to apply the DVA and National Instruction in practice?’ It appeared from the interviews that the majority of the research participants had a basic awareness of the DVA and the National Instruction. However, when it came to the practical application of knowledge in a ‘problem-solving’ scenario, it was notable that the majority of interviewees experienced difficulties when multi-faceted variables were included. It was recommended that more members need training on the DVA, and more frequent and/or more in-depth courses should be offered. Furthermore it was recommended that special attention be devoted to training on domestic violence during the basic six months’ training for new students.
2009-01-01T00:00:00Z